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This Column Appears in:
Birmingham, AL "News"
Little Rock, AR "Democrat Gazette"
New Britain, CT "Herald"
Orlando, FL, "Citizen Gazette"
Vero Beach, FL, 'Press Journal"
Kaneohe, HA, "Midweek"
Geneva, IL, "Chronicle"
Shreveport, LA " The
Times"
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“Daily News”
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August 2007, Week 2
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GOOGLE MANIA
THE GMAIL GOES THROUGH
We're both big fans of Gmail, and we'll tell you why in just a
moment. But first we want to tell you the exclusivity is gone. You used
to have to be "invited" to use Google's Gmail service. Invitations were
even sold on eBay. But it's free and wide open now. So get it and love
it at Gmail.com.

There are several great things about Gmail: One is that it keeps a
record of all your mail. We mean "all" your mail, even spam and the
stuff you deleted. That means that later on, when you strike your hand
to your forehead and say "dummkopf," or something like that, "I know I
threw out an e-mail about this six months ago," it will still be there.
Every so often you might want to clear those old files out -- for
neatness' sake, mind you -- but if you don't, nothing bad will happen.
You can recover any of those e-mails if you can remember a single
significant word in the content.
Now we come to the spam catcher. Gmail has the best spam catcher
we've ever found. We get close to 300 spam messages a day -- apiece.
Gmail catches 99 percent, and after 30 days sends them into the great
beyond. At the moment, Joy has 8,115 pieces of spam in her folder, all
destined for oblivion.
Other spam catchers are amateurs. Bob has an America Online account,
which bills itself as a superior spam catcher, but seems close to
worthless. It has cut out less than half the spam. You call that
spam-catching? Every Nigerian between Lagos and Timbuctu seems to have
the account name, and they all stand ready to transfer millions if only
you will provide your bank code
If you want to go behind the scenes and see how Gmail goes through
(not really), you can go to
Mail.Google.com/mvideo and watch three Bulgarian grandmas pass it
hand to hand and a Taiwanese forklift operator carry it to a warehouse.
(You can submit your own.)
NEW GMAIL FEATURES
You can collect mail from five other e-mail accounts. Any replies
you send will look like they came from the original e-mail account.
The Gmail calendar is a button at the top of the screen if you sign up
for it, and it lets you keep track of all your appointments, set
reminder messages and add search results, like TV show times and dates.
More on this later.
Package tracking. If you order something from online retailers, they
usually send you a note when it is shipped and they include the
shipper's tracking code. Ordinarily you would have to go to the
shipper's Web site and type in the code to find out where the package
is. But on the right of the Gmail screen there is a button that will
automatically link to the shipper and track the package.
If someone sends you a PowerPoint file, you don't have to launch a
PowerPoint viewer. Just click the "view as slideshow" button.
THE GMAIL CALENDAR
This is the top "wow." Along with keeping your appointments, you can
search for events. Enter your U.S. city and state and you will be
connected to a summary of every available online events calendar for
that location. It also works for many cities around the world, and those
lists are being expanded as well.

Click on something you're interested in and it will not only be added
to your calendar, but all subsequent events in that category will be
added to your calendar. Want to watch the World Series of Poker? All
matching programs with their times, dates and channels for your location
will be entered on the calendar. If you search on just "poker" as an
event, you get a ton of listings, each with a brief summary line. (Some
are events in neighborhood bars.) To find all this stuff, go to
Google.com/calendar/gallery.
You can search public calendars by any keyword, by the way. Such
calendars include public appearance schedules of the current
presidential candidates, concert dates hosted by Atlantic Records and
other companies, new DVD movie releases from Netflix, new TV shows and
sporting events, updates on special travel deals, etc.
WHO PAYS THE PIPER?
How does Google get paid for providing these services? It sells ads,
of course. The ads appear as remarkably unobtrusive short boxes of text
along the right-hand side of your screen. There are no distracting
pictures, just a few lines of text. Similar unobtrusive ads appear on
screens when using the browsers from Mozilla, Firefox and Maxthon.
This contrasts remarkably with the ads we get with America Online,
which come complete with flashing lights and automatic video sequences
you can't turn off. Every single e-mail has an advertisement at the
bottom, usually in motion. Many of the ads seem like spam -- like
pitches to take out new mortgages, just when mortgage defaults have
become a national problem. The ads are so annoying that Bob swears he
will never patronize any company that runs a promotion on AOL.
WHO GOES THERE?
At StatCounter.com you can download a program that invisibly counts
visitors to your Web site. The numbers will usually be much lower than
what you get from other Web traffic analyzers. Differences in counts
often arise because many users delete all cookies when they log off the
Internet. When that user returns to the site later, they are counted as
a new visitor.
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